This Monday INSIDER Daily Digest starts with a look at the Army’s plans for artificial intelligence, how the government shutdown is affecting one defense-related agency, some missile defense news, and cybersecurity news.
The Army is making some adjustments to its AI plans:
Project Linchpin undergoing revamp, name change to match NGC2 advances
The Army's pipeline for artificial intelligence and machine learning integration will be revised going forward, a senior leader announced this week, which involves a new name and consolidation under the service's next-generation network.
Looks like more than 1,000 employees at one government agency are about to be furloughed:
NNSA will furlough 1,400 workers as shutdown grinds on, Congress says
The National Nuclear Security Administration has told Congress the ongoing government shutdown is forcing the agency to furlough 1,400 workers as its funding for salaries and expenses is nearly exhausted.
Raytheon is making a big investment in one of its missile defense radar programs:
Raytheon breaks ground on LTAMDS expansion to ramp production
Raytheon has broken ground on a $53 million expansion of its Andover, MA radar production campus, a move company executives say will allow it to ramp up output of the Army's new Lower Tier Air and Missile Defense Sensor after a year of throttled production.
Conference news from our colleagues at Inside Cybersecurity:
CMMC stakeholder community convenes for annual conference without DOD leaders in attendance
NATIONAL HARBOR, MD -- An annual conference for the Pentagon's Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification program struck a positive note among stakeholders who are preparing for a Nov. 10 start to requirements showing up in defense contracts, while raising some eyebrows over potential impacts from the ongoing government shutdown.
